Linux, Open Source, Web, Engineering, Technology
July 30, 2009
The Gap moves from Windows to Red Hat Linux
via cnet.com
Red Hat recently posted an interesting case study on how retail giant The Gap moved from a Unix and Windows based e-commerce infrastructure to one based on Red Hat Linux with support for Microsoft’s Active Directory via LikeWise, a product that improves the management and interoperability of Windows and Linux systems.
According to the case study, “Gap Inc. Direct needed to revamp its entire end-to-end business technology platform–from the customer-facing front-end system, to the back-end order management application, to the business tools that supported the company’s long-term growth strategy.”
Platform growth and adding new features were key to the underlying infrastructure and the ability to integrate a heterogeneous environment was the other major hurdle that needed to be addressed. Positive ROI was an added bonus.
“As far as benefits go, first and foremost, Gap Inc. Direct has realized tremendous cost savings. “The ROI (return on investment) of the Red Hat-Likewise solution is hundreds of thousands of dollars annually once you add the hardware and software savings to the reduced costs of manually auditing our systems. Likewise Enterprise’s compliance enhancements allowed us to expand our use of Red Hat Enterprise Linux,” said Arcuri.
I’m sure there are many Red Hat Linux wins to be touted, just as Microsoft would happily tell you about their customer successes. What’s interesting here is that Red Hat is actively telling a story that includes a diverse environment and not pushing a myopic, single vendor view of the enterprise.
Posted via email from Alejandro Cuervo
Posted by acuervo. Filed under Uncategorized.
2 Responses to “The Gap moves from Windows to Red Hat Linux”
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August 13th, 2009 at 7:55 pm
A company that uses Linux while commercializing hegemony is consider a Win?
August 14th, 2009 at 9:20 am
I am only looking at the technology aspect.
When a Fortune 500 company migrates 1000+ servers from Windows to Linux, I consider this a win.